March 25, 1950
Visiting Saudi Arabia, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State George C. McGhee tells Sheik Yusuf Yassin, Saudi Arabia’s deputy foreign minister, that as a sign of its impartiality between Israel and the Arab states, the United States “refrained from any pressure on Arab states for settlement of Arab differences with Israel, but also wondered if Arab states could normalize their relations with Israel and achieve some kind of working relations with Israel,” pointing out that present Arab policies would likely produce an aggressive Israeli reaction most feared by Arab states.
Yassin responds that “Arab states would never agree to any working relationship with Israel, that Arabs considered Israel a great menace without any limits to territorial ambitions. Arabs believed that Israel had every intention of expanding beyond Israel to include Syria, Jordan, et cetera.” Yassin continues, “Arabs have no aggressive designs against Israel, but intended to treat that state as if a wall surrounded it. Saudi Arabia has no basis for trade with Israel. … We shall never admit a Jew in Saudi Arabia, and we shall never admit anyone travelling on an Israeli visa.”
By the 1970s at least, some Jews travel to Saudi Arabia. By the 1990s, Israel builds a wall around an eastern perimeter and is considering doing the same along the Jordan River in shaping security understandings in a framework agreement with the Palestinians. Saudi-Israeli cooperation over Iran as a common foe remains in the realm of active speculation.